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-- Do any of you master your demos?
Do any of you master your demos?
If so, with what?
i normalize with SF6, that's it.
no mastering. A few recorded sets ago sucked ass due to volume levels, but I let that be a learning experience. Rely on your GAINS!
Use your gains as mentioned earlier, but that's more to control the actual volume of the mix.
I like to stick it through my BBE sonic maximizer just to give it a little more punch and to make it perhaps stand out from other demos.
Cheers
Nem
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| Originally posted by Nemesis44 Use your gains as mentioned earlier, but that's more to control the actual volume of the mix. I like to stick it through my BBE sonic maximizer just to give it a little more punch and to make it perhaps stand out from other demos. Cheers Nem |
on alot of my mixes i would eq/compress........when i make mixes on allen heath/bozak/urei mixer i don't eq just compress.
I use Izotope Ozone to master my mixes.
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| Originally posted by Dhagor where could I find it? or will you keep it as your 'trick of the trade' ? |
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| Originally posted by Nemesis44 I like to stick it through my BBE sonic maximizer just to give it a little more punch and to make it perhaps stand out from other demos. |
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| Originally posted by DJ Joshua H Is this the same or similar to hard limiting? Cool Edit has a hard limiting feature which will basically increase the sound level of the file a certain amount and cut off any sound that goes above the level that you have specified. I've found that this doesn't give any distortion but it adds some kick to the music. |
Well I'm talking about adding a bit of punch and clarity, for levels I just work my gains while mixing it.
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| Originally posted by nrjizer Well I'm talking about adding a bit of punch and clarity, for levels I just work my gains while mixing it. |
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| Originally posted by dj_inferno I use Izotope Ozone to master my mixes. |
.......take a track that is supposedly mastered ......when u record that track flat @ 0db it should be a perfectly mastered track....what i have found over the years and i am not say'n this is right its just my opinion........ this is where the quality of the mixer comes in. if u do what i just mentioned on a quality mixer the track should sound dope.....after alot of money spent and wasted time this is what conclusion i have come to... people see me swapping mixers like a freak on here...now u know why !!!!!!!the mixer makes the mix IMHO
my friend told me this along time ago.....u shouldn't be doing anything to your mix...record it flat thats it......i would do that and it would sound like dick.....so i start eq'n and doing all sorts of stuff to make it sound better....but i'm far from a pro and some tracks would need less eq than others it can be quite a project.......
after 6 years i'm just getting it to sound the way i want when recording....and thats by leaving it alone and let the mixer do the work.......moral: save up and get a good mixer
BBE is easy enough to find if you search for it on the web. Can't remember the link off hand.
Will dig it up.
Cheers
Nem
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| Originally posted by djtrinity u shouldn't be doing anything to your mix...record it flat thats it...... |
Well my experience using many recording programs is don't use the normalization or any kind of mastering to the mix. As DJ Trinity said the mixer makes a big difference, as well as the skill of the clown using it.
You need to practice EQ'ing and getting your levels right, and it will sound the best that way. Even AVB mentions he doesn't use any kind of mastering or normalization to his ASOT mixes because it will ruin the sound of the recording. It makes perfect sense if you think about what the program does...it can't hear what sounds the best, it only looks at levels, and it will raise/lower at parts of songs that shouldn't be changed and such, so practice eq'ing and forget about the software fixes.
normalization does not change the sound at all. all it does is bring the level up. it doesn't act differently on different parts of the piece, or look ahead, or act only on certain frequencies, that is what compressors and limiters can do.
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| Originally posted by Briden normalization does not change the sound at all. all it does is bring the level up. it doesn't act differently on different parts of the piece, or look ahead, or act only on certain frequencies, that is what compressors and limiters can do. |
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| Originally posted by auujay That is what I have always thought. However some very knowledgable people on here have posted saying that the problem is that most programs use a shitty algorithm for doing the normalization. The end result is not exactly what you intended. These days I just record my mixes straight into Audition with about 3 db of headroom and just leave it at that. My mixes are not the loudest but a small tweak of the volume knob will fix that (my mixes aren't quiet though). |
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